One of the game’s greatest wide receivers who’s not in the Hall of Fame, this two-time All-Pro made the 46-yard touchdown catch that sealed the Chiefs’ 23-7 upset of Minnesota in Super Bowl 4. Now 70, Taylor has battled Parkinson’s disease for the last decade and currently is being cared for by his sister, Florence, a nurse, at his home in Kansas City.

2

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Jake Scott, S, Dolphins (6, 7, 8)

The short, cocky, balding safety was MVP in Miami’s 14-7 win over the Redskins in Super Bowl 7 and established a record for most fumbles recovered (two) when the Dolphins beat Minnesota 24-7 in Super Bowl 8. Scott became an investor after he played his ninth and final NFL season in 1978 and has lived on the Hawaiian island of Kauai since 1982. The 67-year-old former University of Georgia All-American made one of his few trips to the U.S. mainland in 2011, when he accepted entrance into the College Football Hall of Fame.

3

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Chuck Foreman, RB, Vikings (8, 9, 11)

The versatile Foreman, known as the “Spin Doctor” for his trademark method of breaking tackles, was arguably the NFC’s best running back in the 1970s, making five Pro Bowls and leading the perennial-bridesmaid Vikings to three winless Super Bowls in four years. In 1975, he became the first running back to lead the NFL in receptions (73), while also rushing for 1,070 yards and scoring a then-NFC record 22 touchdowns. Now 62, he lives in the Minneapolis area, where he is a substitute high school teacher and hosts a weekly internet sports talk show called “Spin It” on VoiceAmerica radio.

4

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Butch Johnson, WR, Cowboys (12, 13)

Known for his “California Quake” touchdown celebration, the flashy Johnson never won the starting job in eight years with the Cowboys, but he had a penchant for making acrobatic, clutch catches—especially in the postseason. His diving 45-yard scoring grab that helped Dallas secure a 27-10 win over Denver in Super Bowl 12 still makes the game’s all-time highlight reels. A year later, he became only the second player to catch TD passes in back-to-back Super Bowls when the Cowboys lost to Pittsburgh, 35-31, in Super Bowl 13. After his retirement from the game in 1986, the Los Angeles native settled in the Dallas area, where he is now global senior director of community affairs and sports marketing for Mannatech, a dietary supplement company.

5

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Rod Martin, LB, Raiders (15, 18)

Martin is still the only player to make three interceptions in a Super Bowl game. The first of his trio—a first-quarter pick on Eagles QB Ron Jaworski’s first pass of the game—dramatically set the stage for the Raiders’ 27-10 win over Philadelphia in Super Bowl 15. Now 57, Martin is the manager of technical and user support services at the Information Sciences Institute at the University of Southern California, his alma mater.

6

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Ottis Anderson, RB, Giants (21, 25)

As a vital part of coach Bill Parcells’ ball-control offense at New York in the 1980s, the burly Anderson rushed for 102 yards and was MVP of the Giants’ 20-19 Super Bowl 25 win over Buffalo. Since retiring in 1993, after 14 NFL seasons and 10,275 career rushing yards, he has lived in the New York area and worked as a motivational speaker and fundraiser through his marketing firm, Ottis Anderson Enterprises.

7

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Timmy Smith, RB, Redskins (22)

As a fifth-round rookie out of Texas Tech in 1987, Smith came out of nowhere to run for a record 204 yards and two scores in Washington’s 42-10 demolition of Denver in Super Bowl 22. He did so after playing only seven games (with no starts) and rushing for 126 yards in the regular season. He came back in 1988 to start eight games for the Redskins and gain 470 yard, but injuries kept him from hanging on to the job in D.C., and he was forced to retire from the game just two years later. After leaving the NFL, things wouldn’t get any better for the New Mexico native, who was sentenced to 30 months in federal prison in 2006 after pleading guilty to cocaine distribution. He was released in March 2008 and the 49-year-old was last reported to be getting his life back together in Denver, where he was working as a bus dispatcher.

8

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Ickey Woods, RB, Bengals (23)

The charismatic Woods was a pop culture icon as a rookie in 1988, taking his “Ickey Shuffle” touchdown dance all the way to the Super Bowl. He rushed for a game-leading 79 yards in the Bengals’ 20-16 loss to Joe Montana’s 49ers. During the regular season, he ran for 1,066 yards and 15 touchdowns. Woods’ time in the spotlight would be short, however, as knee problems forced him out of the game in 1991. In keeping with his off-kilter personality, Woods now spends his time teaching football to the opposite sex as head coach for the Cincinnati Sizzle of the Women’s Football Alliance.

9

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John Taylor, WR, 49ers (23, 24, 29)

San Francisco’s “other” receiver (there was this guy named Rice who lined up on the opposite side) set the Super Bowl record for punt-return yardage in Super Bowl 23. His 10-yard TD grab that won that game in its waning seconds is still considered one of the NFL’s most exciting all-time plays. Taylor, 50, now lives in Clovis, Calif., about two hours southeast of the heroics he once produced for the 49ers at Candlestick Park. Since leaving the game in 1996, he has owned a trucking company and is now an independent owner/operator, making cross-country deliveries for Sysco Foods and Perdue Farms in his Kenworth 18-wheeler.

10

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Andre Coleman, KR/WR, Chargers (29)

In 1995, Coleman set the Super Bowl record for all-purpose yardage by returning eight kickoffs for 244 yards—including a 98-yarder that amazingly wasn’t a TD—in San Diego’s 49-26 loss to the 49ers. Despite also being a backup wide receiver, he had no catches in the game. He was out of the NFL altogether three years later, retiring with the Steelers in 1998 after just five pro seasons. Now 40, he’s coming off his third year as an assistant football coach at Youngstown State in Ohio, where he tutors the Penguins’ wide receivers and return men.

11

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Larry Brown, CB, Cowboys (30)

Brown picked off two Neil O’Donnell passes in Dallas’ 27-17 win over the Steelers in Super Bowl 30, becoming the first cornerback to win the game’s MVP award. He was a starter on each of the Cowboys’ three championship teams in the 1990s. Currently living in the Dallas area, Brown, 42, is now co-host of the Cowboys Radio Network’s pre-game and post-game shows.

12

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Mike Jones, LB, Rams (34)

Jones made “The Tackle” of Tennessee wide receiver Kevin Dyson on the last play of Super Bowl 34 to preserve the Rams’ 23-16 victory. He went on to play 12 seasons and 183 games in the NFL before retiring in 2002 to pursue a coaching career. The 43-year-old Mizzou alum is currently the head football coach at NCAA Division II Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Mo.

13

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Ricky Proehl, WR, Rams/Panthers (36, 38)

Proehl, known for his efficient route-running and sure hands, is one of only three players to score touchdowns for two different teams in a Super Bowl (Jerry Rice and Muhsin Muhammad are the others). He caught 669 passes in his NFL career and seven in Super Bowls, including the two scoring strikes (both in the final two minutes to tie the game) in respective losses for St. Louis and Carolina. He played his last pro season for the Colts in 2006 and then moved to Charlotte, where the 44-year-old former Wake Forest star was recently promoted to wide receivers coach with the Carolina Panthers after spending two seasons as the team's assistant wide receivers coach.

14

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Willie Parker, RB, Steelers (40, 43)

Signed by the Steelers in 2004 as an undrafted free agent out of the University North Carolina—where he didn’t started a game in four years—the 5-10 Parker was the one of the most unlikely of Super Bowl heroes. His 75-yard touchdown run in Pittsburgh’s 21-10 victory over Seattle in Super Bowl 40 broke Marcus Allen’s 22-year-old record. He came back to win another ring in Super Bowl 43, rushing for 53 yards in the Steelers’ 27-23 win against Arizona. Turf toe and other leg injuries slowed him the next season in Pittsburgh, however, as he started only three of 14 games. The Steelers didn’t re-sign him and Washington waived him during final cuts prior to the 2010 season. Despite flirting with a comeback attempt in the United Football League, Parker, now 32, officially retired from the game last summer when he accepted an assistant-coaching job at NCAA Division II West Virginia Wesleyan.